1. How Facebook Can Ruin Your Friendships - WSJ.com
BONDS AUGUST 25, 2009, 9:26 A.M. ET
How Facebook Ruins Friendships
By ELIZABETH BERNSTEIN
Notice to my friends: I love you all dearly.
But I don't give a hoot that you are "having a busy Monday," your child "took 30 minutes to brush his teeth," your
dog "just ate an ant trap" or you want to "save the piglets." And I really, really don't care which Addams Family
member you most resemble. (I could have told you the answer before you took the quiz on Facebook.)
Here's where you and I went wrong: We took our friendship online. First we began communicating more by email
than by phone. Then we switched to "instant messaging" or "texting." We "friended" each other on Facebook, and
began communicating by "tweeting" our thoughts—in 140 characters or less—via Twitter.
All this online social networking was supposed to make us closer. And in some ways it has. Thanks to the Internet,
many of us have gotten back in touch with friends from high school and college, shared old and new photos, and
become better acquainted with some people we might never have grown close to offline.
Last year, when a friend of mine was hit by a car and went into a coma, his friends and family were able to easily
and instantly share news of his medical progress—and send well wishes and support—thanks to a Web page his
mom created for him.
But there's a danger here, too. If we're not careful, our online interactions can hurt our real-life relationships.
Like many people, I'm experiencing Facebook Fatigue. I'm tired of loved ones—you know who you are—who claim
they are too busy to pick up the phone, or even write a decent email, yet spend hours on social-media sites,
uploading photos of their children or parties, forwarding inane quizzes, posting quirky, sometimes nonsensical
one-liners or tweeting their latest whereabouts. ("Anyone know a good restaurant in Berlin?")
One of the big problems is how we converse. Typing still leaves something to be desired as a communication tool;
it lacks the nuances that can be expressed by body language and voice inflection. "Online, people can't see the
yawn," says Patricia Wallace, a psychologist at Johns Hopkins University's Center for Talented Youth and author of
"The Psychology of the Internet."
But let's face it, the problem is much greater than which tools we use to communicate. It's what we are actually
saying that's really mucking up our relationships. "Oh my God, a college friend just updated her Facebook status to
say that her 'teeth are itching for a flossing!'" shrieked a friend of mine recently. "That's gross. I don't want to hear
about what's going on inside her mouth."
That prompted me to check my own Facebook page, only to find that three of my pals—none of whom know each
other—had the exact same status update: "Zzzzzzz." They promptly put me to "zzzzzzz."
This brings us to our first dilemma: Amidst all this heightened chatter, we're not saying much that's interesting,
folks. Rather, we're breaking a cardinal rule of companionship: Thou Shalt Not Bore Thy Friends.
"It's called narcissism," says Matt Brown, a 36-year-old business-development manager for a chain of hair salons
and spas in Seattle. He's particularly annoyed by a friend who works at an auto dealership who tweets every time
he sells a car, a married couple who bicker on Facebook's public walls and another couple so "mooshy-gooshy" they
sit in the same room of their house posting love messages to each other for all to see. "Why is your life so frickin'
important and entertaining that we need to know?" Mr. Brown says.
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2. How Facebook Can Ruin Your Friendships - WSJ.com
'I Just Ate a Frito Pie'
Gwen Jewett, for her part, is sick of meal status updates. "A few of my friends like to post several times a day about
what they are eating: 'I just ate a Frito pie.' 'I am enjoying a double hot-fudge sundae at home tonight.' 'Just ate a
whole pizza with sausage, peppers and double cheese,'" says the 49-year-old career coach in suburban Dallas. "My
question is this: If we didn't call each other on the phone every time we ate before, why do we need the alerts now?
"
For others, boredom isn't the biggest challenge of managing Internet relationships. Consider, for example, how
people you know often seem different online—not just gussied up or more polished, but bolder, too, displaying
sides of their personalities you have never seen before.
Alex Gilbert, 27, who works for a nonprofit in Houston that teaches creative writing to kids, is still puzzling over an
old friend—"a particularly masculine-type dude"—who plays in a heavy-metal band and heads a motorcycle club
yet posts videos on Facebook of "uber cute" kittens. "It's not fodder for your real-life conversation," Mr. Gilbert
says. "We're not going to get together and talk about how cute kittens are."
James Hills discovered that a colleague is gay via Facebook, but he says that didn't bother him. It was after his
friend joined groups that cater to hairy men, such as "Furball NYC," that he was left feeling awkward. "This is
something I just didn't need to know," says Mr. Hills, who is 32 and president of a marketing firm in Elgin, Ill. "I'd
feel the same way if it was a straight friend joining a leather-and-lace group."
And then there's jealousy. In all that information you're posting about your life—your vacation, your kids, your
promotions at work, even that margarita you just drank—someone is bound to find something to envy. When it
comes to relationships, such online revelations can make breaking up even harder to do.
"Facebook prolongs the period it takes to get over someone, because you have an open window into their life,
whether you want to or not," says Yianni Garcia of New York, a consultant who helps companies use social media.
"You see their updates, their pictures and their relationship status."
Mr. Garcia, 24, felt the sting of Facebook jealousy personally last spring, after he split up with his boyfriend. For a
few weeks, he continued to visit his ex's Facebook page, scrutinizing his new friends. Then one day he discovered
that his former boyfriend had blocked him from accessing his profile.
Why? "He said he'd only 'unfriended' me to protect himself, because if someone flirted with me he would feel
jealous," Mr. Garcia says.
Facebook can also be a mecca for passive-aggressive behavior. "Suddenly, things you wouldn't say out loud in
conversation are OK to say because you're sitting behind a computer screen," says Kimberly Kaye, 26, an arts
writer in New York. She was surprised when friends who had politely discussed health-care reform over dinner
later grew much more antagonistic when they continued the argument online.
Just ask Heather White. She says her college roommate at the University of Georgia started an argument over text
about who should clean their apartment. Ms. White, 22, who was home visiting her parents at the time, asked her
friend to call her so they could discuss the issue. Her friend never did.
A few days later, Ms. White, who graduated in May, updated her Facebook status, commenting that her favorite
country duo, Brooks & Dunn, just broke up. Almost immediately, her roommate responded, writing publicly on her
wall: "Just like us." The two women have barely spoken since then.
Band-Aid Tactics
So what's the solution, short of "unfriending" or "unfollowing" everyone who annoys you? You can use the "hide"
button on Facebook to stop getting your friends' status updates—they'll never know—or use TwitterSnooze, a Web
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3. How Facebook Can Ruin Your Friendships - WSJ.com
site that allows you to temporarily suspend tweets from someone you follow. (Warning: They'll get a notice from
Twitter when you begin reading their tweets again.)
But these are really just Band-Aid tactics. To improve our interactions, we need to change our conduct, not just
cover it up. First, watch your own behavior, asking yourself before you post anything: "Is this something I'd want
someone to tell me?" "Run it by that focus group of one," says Johns Hopkins's Dr. Wallace.
And positively reward others, responding only when they write something interesting, ignoring them when they are
boring or obnoxious. (Commenting negatively will only start a very public war.)
If all that fails, you can always start a new group: "Get Facebook to Create an Eye-Roll Button Now!"
Write to Elizabeth Bernstein at Bonds@wsj.com
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